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  • Öğe
    The Impact of Yoga Practices on Body Composition and Vital Signs in Children and Adolescents With Obesity: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
    (John Wiley and Sons Inc, 2025) Caner, Nuray; Erdoğan Yüce, Gülyeter
    Introduction: Clear recommendations for treating childhood obesity include family involvement, improving diet quality, reduc-ing portion sizes, increasing physical activity, and decreasing sedentary behaviors.Methods: This systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to provide evidence the effects of yoga interventions on BMI, weight,body composition, and vital signs in children or adolescents with overweight/obesity. This study searched the PubMed, Web ofScience, and EBSCO databases to include all studies published up to June 2024. Methodological quality was assessed with theRoB 2. Randomized or nonrandomized controlled studies were included. The standardized mean difference with a 95% confi-dence interval was calculated. Heterogeneity was analyzed using the I2 test and Q statistic. Publication bias was assessed withthe Egger regression test.
  • Öğe
    Bioacoustics review of Anatolian species of the predatory bush-cricket genus Saga (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae: Saginae) with the description of a new species
    (Magnolia Press, 2019) Şirin, Deniz; Taylan, Mehmet Sait; Sevgili, Hasan; Mol, Abbas
    The genus Saga is a genus of generally large predatory bush-cricket species. It includes 13 taxa in the Palaearctic region. In this research, eight species belonging to Saga (Tettigoniidae, Saginae) were sampled during field studies in different regions of Anatolia of Turkey between 2010 and 2018 (except one specimen). The bioacoustic parameters of these species recorded during the field or in laboratory conditions and the male calling song descriptions, as well as the oscillographic illustrations and distribution maps are given. A new population of Saga found from the South-Eastern Taurus (Hakkari province), which is affiliated to a new species and shows similarity to S. ephippigera, along with the morphological and bioacoustical descriptions of Saga hakkarica sp. n. Sirin & Taylan from Turkey, arc also given. The relationships between the new species and the closest taxa are discussed using morphological and bioacoustical characters. The structural investigations of the male calling songs reveal three different bioacoustic groups affiliated to eight Anatolian Saga species; as (i) Ephippigera group (S. syriaca + (S. ephippigera + Saga hakkarica), (ii) Natoliae group (S. natoliae + (S. beieri + (S. longicaudata + S. puella) and (iii) S. cappadocica.